کلمات کلیدی مربوط به کتاب و غیره. هنر معماری اطلاعات سازمانی. یک رویکرد مبتنی بر سیستم برای باز کردن قفل بینش تجاری: مهندسی انفورماتیک و کامپیوتر، طراحی سیستم های اطلاعاتی
در صورت تبدیل فایل کتاب etc. The Art of Enterprise Information Architecture. A Systems-Based Approach for Unlocking Business Insight به فرمت های PDF، EPUB، AZW3، MOBI و یا DJVU می توانید به پشتیبان اطلاع دهید تا فایل مورد نظر را تبدیل نمایند.
توجه داشته باشید کتاب و غیره. هنر معماری اطلاعات سازمانی. یک رویکرد مبتنی بر سیستم برای باز کردن قفل بینش تجاری نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.
Издательство IBM Press, 2010, -462 pp.
In the past two years, I have become
more involved in what my company, Capgemini, has fondly started
to describe as the "business technology agora," a place where
IT and business people meet, discuss, make decisions, and
prepare for action. Like in the old Greek cities, this agora
proves to be a catalyst for dialogue, a gathering place for
different stakeholders to reach out to the others and improve
understanding.
By using the principles of the Business Technology Agora, we
carefully identify the most important business drivers of an
organization, map these to technology solutions in different
categories, and discuss impact, timing, and implementation
issues. Categorizing solutions in different areas helps to
simplify the technology landscape, but it also provides us with
a wealth of insight into what areas of IT truly matter to the
business of our clients.
If there is one dominant category that we have identified in
these two years of business technology sessions across the
world, it is no doubt "Thriving on Data." The abundant,
ubiquitous availability of real-time information proves to be
the single most important requirement to satisfying the needs
of the business.
Organizations envision thriving on data in many different ways.
One way might be to simply get more of a grip on corporate
performance by creating a more integrated view of
client-related information and having management dashboards
that truly show the actual state of the business. Another way,
being used more often, is to carefully analyze data from inside
and outside of the enterprise to predict and understand what
might happen next. Above all, the exchange of meaningful data
is the glue that binds all the actors (man, machine, anything
else) in the highly interconnected, network of everything that
nowadays defines our business environment; data literally gets
externalized and becomes the main tool for organizations to
reach out to the outside world.
Given the extreme importance of data today, it is surprising
that many organizations do not seem to be able to govern their
data properly, let alone use data in a strategic way to achieve
their objectives. Data is often scattered across the
enterprise. There are no measures to guarantee consistency, and
ownership is unclear. The situation becomes even more difficult
when different business entities are involved or when data
needs to be shared between organizations. This is a truly
complex problem and businesses need a much more architectural
approach for leveraging their data.
In my other role as a board member of The Open Group, I have
come to value the role of architecture as a tool not only to
bring structure and simplification to complex situations, but
also to bridge the views of the different stakeholders
involved. If we are to achieve boundary-less information flow
inside and between organizations, which is the ultimate goal of
The Open Group, we need standards. Standards aren't only about
the terms of definitions and semantics but about the
methodologies we apply and the models that we build on. After
all, ever since the rise and fall of the Tower of Babel, we
know that successful collaboration depends on the ability to
share the same ways of working, to share the same objectives,
to build on a common foundation, and to be culturally aligned.
Essentially, it is about speaking the same language in the
broadest sense of the word.
The authors of this book aim for nothing less than creating an
architectural perspective on enterprise information, and they
have embarked on a mission of epical proportions. By bringing
together insights and best practices from all over the
industry, they provide us with the models, methodologies,
diagnostics, and tools to get a grip on enterprise information.
They show us how enterprise information fits into the broader
context of enterprise architecture frameworks, such as The Open
Group Architecture Framework (TOGAF). They introduce a
multi-layered information architecture reference model that has
the allure of a standard, common foundation for the entire
profession. They also show us how Enterprise Information
Architecture (EIA) alludes to emerging, contemporary topics
such as SOA, business intelligence, cloud-based delivery, and
master data management.
However, most of all, they supply us with a shared,
architectural language to create oversight and control in the
Babylonic confusion that we call the enterprise information
landscape. When the business and IT side of the enterprise
share the same insights around the strategic value of
information and when they mutually agree on the unprecedented
importance of information stewardship, they start to see the
point of this book—how to unleash the power of enterprise
information and how to truly thrive on data.
The Imperative for a New Approach to
Information Architecture
Introducing Enterprise Information Architecture
Data Domains, Information Governance, and Information
Security
Enterprise Information Architecture: A Conceptual and Logical
View
Enterprise Information Architecture: Component Model
Enterprise Information Architecture: Operational Model
New Delivery Models: Cloud Computing
Enterprise Information Integration
Intelligent Utility Networks
Enterprise Metadata Management
Master Data Management
Information Delivery in a Web 2.0 World
Dynamic Warehousing
New Trends in Business Analytics and Optimization
A: Software Product Mapping
B: Standards and Specifications
C: Regulations